Vietnam democracy activists face prison

VIETNAM

Associated Press

Updated 11:03 pm, Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Hanoi --

A Vietnamese court found 14 democracy activists guilty of subversion and sentenced them Wednesday to jail terms ranging from three to 13 years, verdicts which drew immediate criticism from the United States.

The long prison terms suggest that the Communist government is intent on stepping up its ongoing crackdown on people who publicly challenge its authoritarian, one-party rule. In recent years, the Internet has emerged as a powerful tool for dissidents, alarming many in the ruling elite at a time of economic uncertainty.

The defendants are linked to Viet Tan, a Vietnamese dissident group based in the United States. Vietnam's government has labeled it a terrorist group, but the U.S. government has said it has seen no evidence that it advocates violence.

The People's Court in central Nghe An province sentenced three defendants to 13 years during the two-day trial, defense lawyer Nguyen Thi Hue said. She said 11 others received jail terms ranging from three to eight years. One of the three-year terms was suspended.

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The defendants, including 12 Catholics, were arrested in late 2011.

Another defense lawyer, Tran Thu Nam, said they were found guilty of attending Viet Tan's overseas training courses on nonviolent struggle and computer and Internet security. Some also protested against China's territorial claims in the disputed South China Sea, a sensitive issue for Vietnam because of the nationalist passion the issue provokes and Hanoi's ideological ties with Beijing.

The United States wants closer ties with Vietnam because it sees it as a foil against China, but Hanoi's human rights record is a barrier. Last year, more than a dozen activists were sentenced to long jail terms.